A Hoosier Chronicle eBook

Meredith Merle Nicholson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 600 pages of information about A Hoosier Chronicle.

A Hoosier Chronicle eBook

Meredith Merle Nicholson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 600 pages of information about A Hoosier Chronicle.

“No, sir; I didn’t see him; I didn’t know he wanted to see me.”

“He was here yesterday and probably hadn’t had time to see you before you left town.  He had a proposition to make in that Canneries case.”

“I didn’t know that, of course, or I should have waited.  I’ve never had any talk with him about the Canneries business.”

“So he said.”

Bassett clapped his hand savagely upon his hat suddenly to save it from the breeze that had been roused by the increasing speed of the boat.  He clearly disliked having to hold his hat on his head.  Dan marked his old chief’s irritation.  There were deep lines in Bassett’s face that had only lately been written there.

“I’ll see him Monday.  I only ran up for a day or two.  It’s frightfully hot at home.”

Neither the heat, nor Harwood’s enterprise in escaping from it, interested Bassett, who lifted his voice above the thumping of the machinery to say:—­

“I told Fitch to talk to you about that suit of yours and fix it up if we can come to terms.  I told him what I’d stand for.  I’m not afraid of the suit, and neither is Fitch, and I want you to understand that.  My reasons for getting rid of it are quite apart from the legal questions.”

“It will save time, Mr. Bassett, if you tell Fitch that the suit won’t be dropped until all the claims I represent are paid in full.  Several of your associates in the reorganization have already sounded me on that, and I’ve said no to all of them.”

“Oh, you have, have you?” There was a hard glitter in Bassett’s eyes and his jaws tightened.

“All right, then; go ahead,” he added, and walked grimly back to his chair.

When the steamer stopped at his landing, Bassett jumped off and began the ascent to his house without looking at Harwood again.  Dan felt that it had been worth the journey to hear direct from Bassett the intimations of a wish to compromise the Canneries case.  And yet, while the boat was backing off, it was without exultation that he watched Bassett’s sturdy figure slowly climbing the steps.  The signs of wear, the loss of the politician’s old elasticity, touched a chord of pity in Harwood’s breast.  In the early days of their acquaintance it had seemed to him that Bassett could never be beaten; and yet Dan had to-night read defeat in his face and manner.  The old Morton Bassett would never have yielded an inch, never have made overtures of compromise.  He would have emerged triumphant from any disaster.  Harwood experienced something of the sensations of a sculptor, who, having begun a heroic figure in the grand manner of a Michael Angelo, finds his model shrinking to a pitiful pygmy.  As Bassett passed from sight he turned with a sigh toward the red, white and blue lanterns that advertised Mrs. Owen’s dock to the mariner.

“Well, well, if it isn’t Daniel,” exclaimed Mrs. Owen, as Harwood greeted her and Sylvia on her veranda.  “One of the farm hands quit to-day and you can go to work in the morning, Daniel.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Hoosier Chronicle from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.